The Late Ordovician Mass Extinction wiped out 85% of animal species in two phases (LOME1 and LOME2). The kill mechanisms for the extinction phases are debated, but deteriorating climate and the expansion of marine anoxia appear to have been important factors. Nevertheless, the spatial extent and intensity of marine anoxia and its temporal relationship with the extinctions are not well understood. Here, we review existing global paleoredox proxy data based on molybdenum (Mo) and uranium (U) isotopes from four paleocontinents combined with new Mo isotope data from Dob's Linn, Scotland. Individually, these sedimentary records demonstrate significant redox fluctuations, but our coupled dynamic oceanic mass balance model for the evolution of the...
The early Paleoproterozoic witnessed Earth's first major oxygenation, referred to as the Great Oxida...
Expanded ocean anoxia and global cooling have been invoked as major causal mechanisms for the Late O...
The timing and causation of the Capitanian (late Middle Permian) biocrisis remain controversial. Her...
The Late Ordovician Mass Extinction wiped out 85% of animal species in two phases (LOME1 and LOME2)....
The timing and connections between global cooling, marine redox conditions, and biotic turnover are ...
The timing and connections between global cooling, marine redox conditions, and biotic turnover are ...
The Great Ordovician Biodiversification Event (GOBE) represents the greatest increase in marine anim...
One of the most severe extinctions of complex marine life in Earth’s history occurred at the end of ...
The latest Permian extinction (LPE), ca. 252 Ma, represents the most severe extinctionevent in Earth...
The trajectory of global ocean oxygenation could have greatly influenced the metazoan evolutions bec...
The Late Ordovician mass extinction (LOME, ca. 445 Ma) was the first of the "Big Five" Phanerozoic e...
Relatively brief periods of severe paleoenvironmental change during the Jurassic and Cretaceous were...
How much dissolved oxygen was present in the mid-Proterozoic oceans between 1.8 and 1.0 billion year...
The end-Triassic extinction coincided with an increase in marine black shale deposition and biomarke...
The early Paleoproterozoic witnessed Earth's first major oxygenation, referred to as the Great Oxida...
Expanded ocean anoxia and global cooling have been invoked as major causal mechanisms for the Late O...
The timing and causation of the Capitanian (late Middle Permian) biocrisis remain controversial. Her...
The Late Ordovician Mass Extinction wiped out 85% of animal species in two phases (LOME1 and LOME2)....
The timing and connections between global cooling, marine redox conditions, and biotic turnover are ...
The timing and connections between global cooling, marine redox conditions, and biotic turnover are ...
The Great Ordovician Biodiversification Event (GOBE) represents the greatest increase in marine anim...
One of the most severe extinctions of complex marine life in Earth’s history occurred at the end of ...
The latest Permian extinction (LPE), ca. 252 Ma, represents the most severe extinctionevent in Earth...
The trajectory of global ocean oxygenation could have greatly influenced the metazoan evolutions bec...
The Late Ordovician mass extinction (LOME, ca. 445 Ma) was the first of the "Big Five" Phanerozoic e...
Relatively brief periods of severe paleoenvironmental change during the Jurassic and Cretaceous were...
How much dissolved oxygen was present in the mid-Proterozoic oceans between 1.8 and 1.0 billion year...
The end-Triassic extinction coincided with an increase in marine black shale deposition and biomarke...
The early Paleoproterozoic witnessed Earth's first major oxygenation, referred to as the Great Oxida...
Expanded ocean anoxia and global cooling have been invoked as major causal mechanisms for the Late O...
The timing and causation of the Capitanian (late Middle Permian) biocrisis remain controversial. Her...